Thursday, July 21, 2011

Contrary to what we might nowadays suppose to be the case, misandric
fixation is not necessarily the result of subjection to ideological
indoctrination. Historical cases reveal that the condition can take hold
without the subject having been influenced by either Marxist or
eugenics ideologies. Indoctrination can, obviously, exacerbate certain
vulnerabilities in the subject – weaknesses of character which were
pre-existent; yet indoctrination is not a necessary prerequisite to the
misandric fixation condition.

By far the most well-known example
of misandric fixation is that of Valerie Solanas, author of the 1967
feminist classic, S.C.U.M. (Society for Cutting Up Men) Manifesto. In
2011 public awareness of progressive feminist calls for the achieving of
an anti-male utopia (to be manifested itself in violence against
children and adults) was revived by the appearance of a Solonas-inspired
organization in Sweden and by the disclosure of writings characterized
by misandric fixation at a website called RadfemHub, founded by
best-selling writer Pamela O’Shaughnessy.

Writer who “aspired to found a new cult of “arrialsme” which
would be a perfect expression of her hatred of the male sex, whose ultimate
extinction she envisaged by the practice of universal virginity on the part of
women.”

Writer who “had two favourite themes, namely that the great
majority of men were infected with syphilis and that women should at all times
carry guns against the omnipresent threat of assault from the predatory male.”

“Man is but one of a million humble fertilizers. Nature
intended woman to reign supreme.” Marie Petti, leader of a secret
ultra-feminist movement that has sprung up throughout the British Isles, …
voiced this slogan of the new organization.

She preyed upon married men; suspected of murdering 12. – Quote:
“I am an enemy of the male sex. Years ago a man wronged medeeply and broke my girl’s heart. I vowed to be revenged on him
and his sex. I have kept my word, for I have made men suffer something of what
I have suffered. They may say I am responsible for the death of these men, and
they may even take my life for what they call my crime. If they do I shall be
glad to die with the knowledge that I have paid my debt in full. I do not deny
that I have derived pleasure from the sufferings of the men they call myvictims. I have enjoyed every pang they suffered,
every agony they endured. Pangs and agony have been balm to my wounded and
bruised heart. My one regret is that I was not able to strike directly at the
man who wronged me.”

This woman was quite pleased with herself for running over a
man with her car over and over again. “I feel no remorse over having killed
him,” Miss Adams said. “I’d do it again. God and I are tired of men taking
advantage of women.”

A bearded, cross-dressing, 37-year-old bandit named Zein
Khattab Ghanzala for 10 years terrorized the entire Behaira Province in the
Nile delta. She explained: “I began to grow the beard when I was only 14. After
that no man would look at me. So I vowed to terrorize these weakneed male
creatures – and I got my revenge in kidnapping and plunder.”

June Ann Olsen was
a serial arsonist from Miami who, over a period of nine years, set scores of
fires. In 1962 she
burned down an entire Miami city block. On numerous occasions she would lure
men into motel rooms. After they were undressed, she would slosh lighter fluid
onto the bed and torch it. “You
ought to see them run,” she told one reporter. She told police: “I just hate
men. They ought to stop the world – and push them all off.”

A group of feminist women have an ideal “career” situation
in mind that can be achieved, they believe, by making a false domestic violence
report followed by a frenzied session of bludgeoning with kitchen implements
upon the head of a hard-working, mild-mannered husband.

This female couple so despised heteronormatives that they
set up a double date (for double murder fun) with two easy marks, but caught
after one of the victims survived their murderous attacks. His friend did not.

At an event called "Patriarchy Slam," 40 women in the audience, many wearing scissors around
their necks, laughed and clapped in response to misandric presentations, then broke into a light-hearted song about
castration.